Volume 98, Issue 9, Pages (May 2010)

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Volume 98, Issue 9, Pages 1873-1882 (May 2010) Influence of Lipid Heterogeneity and Phase Behavior on Phospholipase A2 Action at the Single Molecule Level  Martin Gudmand, Susana Rocha, Nikos S. Hatzakis, Kalina Peneva, Klaus Müllen, Dimitrios Stamou, Hiroshi Uji-I, Johan Hofkens, Thomas Bjørnholm, Thomas Heimburg  Biophysical Journal  Volume 98, Issue 9, Pages 1873-1882 (May 2010) DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035 Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 1 Schematic of the monolayer setup. A DPPC monolayer is compressed into the center of the phase transition region (Π = 8 mN/m, MMA = 65 Å2). At this surface pressure, liquid state lipid molecules (green) coexist with gel state lipid molecules (blue), which form domains. In this coexistence region, L-DPPC monolayers are susceptible to hydrolysis by PLA2-IB (yellow). Hydrolysis leads to formation and accumulation of ionized free palmitic acid (PA, red) and lysophosphatidylcholine (lyso-PC, olive green) in the monolayer. The monolayer trough was custom-designed to accommodate the 200-μm working distance of the high numerical aperture objective (NA = 1.2) and mounted on a home-built epi-fluorescence microscope. Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 2 Time evolution of the morphology of a gel domain during PLA2-IB catalyzed hydrolysis at time 0 min (A), 34 min (B), 48 min (C), and 64 min (D) after compression to 65 Å2. Note that the domain in image A is not the same as the domain followed in images B–D, due to a slight drift in the monolayer. The L-DPPC monolayer was doped with the fluorescent lipid analog (TRITC-DHPE). Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 3 (Left) Pressure-area isotherm from the experiment shown in Fig. 2. Compression was started at a MMA 110 Å2, and the onset of the phase transition region is seen at MMA 82–83 Å2. Compression was stopped at a target MMA of 65 Å2 corresponding to a surface pressure of 8 mN/m. The monolayer was kept a constant area during the enzyme adsorption and hydrolysis process. Domain shapes at corresponding times and pressures during the hydrolysis process are shown for reference. (Right) Pressure-time plot. Compression was started at t = −13 min, the phase coexistence region was reached at t = −6 min, and compression was stopped at MMA 65 Å2 where large trilobed domains were formed (t ≡ 0). Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 4 Wide-field fluorescence images of L-DPPC monolayers compressed to Π = 8 mN/m (22°C) with different concentrations of fluorescently labeled PLA2 enzymes (PLA2-PDI). (A and B) When the enzyme is present in high concentration, it is possible to visualize the domain structure (see text). It is also evident, from the bright regions along the domain interface, that a higher local concentration of PLA2-PDI is found along the fluid/gel boundary. (C) At low concentration, it is possible to discriminate and track single enzyme molecules (fluorescence image after linear deconvolution process). The magnifications show trajectories described by slow diffusing (top) and fast diffusing (bottom) PLA2-PDI molecules. Integration time: 22 ms. Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 5 Diffusion behavior of labeled individual PLA2 molecules. (A) Typical trajectories of individual PLA2 molecules diffusing on the fluid region (white) and near the fluid/gel boundary (yellow) as observed in the background image (accumulated over 100 frames). Four of the trajectories colored in yellow are magnified in panel B. In three of the trajectories, it is possible to distinguish the hot spots (indicated by the red circles) where diffusion is slow. The color scale is sequential and does not indicate real time. The first data point is depicted in red and the last one in blue. Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 6 (A) M-LM image constructs the mobility of PLA2-PDI enzymes diffusing on a L-DPPC that is susceptible to hydrolysis. The enzyme diffuses markedly slower in distinct regions (red areas). (B) In the liquid regions of the nonhydrolyzable D-DPPC monolayer, measured enzyme diffusion mobilities are homogeneously distributed. (C and D) H-LM images showing the localization of PLA2-PDI enzymes diffusing on (C) a L-DPPC and (D) a D-DPPC monolayer. Colored scale bars indicate measured diffusion mobilities (in μm/s) and local occurrence of the enzyme. All scale bars in the images are 10 μm. The total number of images was 1000 corresponding to a total time of 68 s (15 frames/s). Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 7 (A) Accumulation over 50 frames of a L-DPPC layer incubated with low enzyme concentration (≈10–12 M) for >60 min. It is possible to discriminate the gel domain (no enzymes, black region in upper-right corner), the fluid region (enzymes diffusing fast leading to a uniform fluorescence) and the product domain (enzymes diffusing slowly or immobilized). The dashed square indicates the product domain region shown in panels B and C. (B) Fluorescence image of the product domain in which single enzyme molecules can be discriminated. Integration time: 30 ms. (C) The H-LM image shows a tendency for the enzyme to preferentially localize near the gel-fluid boundary. Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 8 M-LM image of the product-enriched area on L-DPPC (see also Fig. 7). The image shows that the diffusion mobility did not vary systematically within the product-enriched area. Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions

Figure 9 Cartoon representation showing typical modes of diffusion in different environments. For diffusion on the fluid region (lipids in green), the diffusion was generally normal with a diffusion coefficient of 3 μm2/s. Enzymes located near L-DPPC gel domains showed more complex diffusion with, e.g., transient trapping of the enzyme. After extended hydrolysis, areas enriched in hydrolysis product (molecules in olive green and red) showed enzyme diffusion that was significantly slower than on the fluid region. See text for details. Biophysical Journal 2010 98, 1873-1882DOI: (10.1016/j.bpj.2010.01.035) Copyright © 2010 Biophysical Society Terms and Conditions